The chairwoman of the civil platform Stand Up.BG Maya Manolova in two consecutive posts on social networks called on President Radev to veto the amendments to the State Property Act, adopted by the deputies on the last day before their vacation.
„The mass privatization of Bulgarian state lands in the dark must stop“, said Manolova and sharply criticized the texts of the law and the way in which they were adopted.
According to her, the amendments were adopted under legal violations, on top of which was the lack of a quorum, and with them the deputies facilitated the sale of those 4,400 state properties, among which there is a state border, several capes of the sea, a mineral spring, park-monument, terrains in the parks Vitosha, Sinite Kamani, Belasitsa, property above a Roman amphitheater.
Therefore, she called on President Rumen Radev to veto these amendments.
„And the deputies should use their long 33-day vacation to think about and abandon these harmful texts. They contradict reason and the law, and if they are adopted again after the veto, the Constitutional Court should also be consulted about them.“
A day earlier, Maya Manolova also published a video from the village of Dvorishte, Kyustendil region, where she intends to build a 1,300-acre solar park in some of the most fertile Bulgarian lands, where she also criticized the way in which the National Assembly canceled the possibility of appealing to a second instance the eco-assessments of “large investment projects projects”, and the terms for public discussion have been shortened by half.
„The adopted changes are in the Transitional and Final Provisions of the State Property Act. Submitted on Monday, adopted by a committee on Wednesday and voted on by the majority on Thursday - naturally, in the absence of a quorum.“ – the chairman of Izpravi se.BG was indignant, the party's press center reported.
In it, Manolova again calls for a presidential veto so that the deputies have time „to rethink their follies, destroying Bulgarian nature while sunbathing at some state resort.“